MAYBE you never get
sick? MANY expats in Tenerife live by that MAXIM. There are three ways to deal
with your health when leaving your home country – cross your fingers and hope you stay well, buy private MEDICAL insurance, or join the system.
We were getting on a
bit when we MOVED here so we MADE sure we were covered for medical care. We
brought E111 certificates for tourists, (you could get one from the Post Office
in those days) which gave us a sense of security until the OH turned 65. Then
it was all systems go to get a MEDICO here. We had learned the hard way to take
with us, on any official occasion, every piece of paper we possessed, plus photocopies
of everything, and we had to visit several different offices, but eventually we had a
GP. Our treatment is paid for by the UK, using the contributions into the
British National Health system that we had paid during our working lives. This is our small Medical Centre.
Within MONTHS I had
seen traumatologists in Las Americas and Santa Cruz and was on the list for a
hip replacement. They said it would be done in about a year! I panicked – an operation, in a hospital for
a week or more, and my Spanish was still basic. OMG! Another reason to learn
Spanish fast. My printed diagram of the female body, with every part labelled,
caused much amusement at subsequent consultations. The MAIN hospital is in
Santa Cruz, so some patients are dealt with in the private hospital in Las
Americas – I was one of the lucky ones.
MODESTY? Forget it. As
a MOTHER of four I lost all false modesty years ago, but it was a shock not to
have curtains between the beds. MY first blanket-bath served as the MORNING
entertainment for the two other women in my room, plus the person who ignored
the closed door. I wasn’t allowed out of bed for several days and MANAGING a
bedpan discreetly was a challenge. A visitor to the next bed actually emptied
mine once. My first shower caused some MAYHEM – I still wasn’t allowed to
stand, so I sat on the toilet while the MALE nurse held the shower hose over me.
Unfortunately the room sloped the wrong way (a common design fault out here)
and we flooded the ward.
Our Outpatients
Department is up the hill at El MOHON, and there’s a half-built hospital there,
but the Canary Government have run out of money and can’t finish it. There was
also a crisis recently when it emerged that the Farmacias hadn’t been paid for
the MEDICINES they had supplied on prescriptions – for a whole year! They've been paid now, though not until they threatened to stop dispensing.
MONKEY ZOO
MONKEYS are engaging creatures, and if they have to be in a zoo, at least the one near us gives them room to move. you are allowed inside some of the cages, which entranced my grandsons. The tiny MARMOSETS were rather shy but some ring-tailed lemurs took fruit from their hands.
My daughter-in-law spent ages talking to a parrot - she had to leave her own behind when she moved to the UK and MARRIED my son. The parrot seemed happy to get so much attention - you could almost see it smiling.
MEANWHILE my son had a long conversation with a chimp. He shouldn't have climbed the barrier to tickle its armpit but there was no-one to stop him. The
chimp eventually had enough of him – he had been chatting up the females as well, which probably wasn't wise - and
sprayed him with a mouthful of water. "Sod off" in Chimp!
For those of you who couldn’t
find MY MYSTERIOUS ghost in the Los Abrigos photo (yesterday’s blog) here is an
enlargement. I drew the ring round the relevant bit.
Only a computer would recognize this as a face!
That bed-bath experience sounds horrendous.
ReplyDeleteAnnalisa - actually I saw the funny side and laughed so hard I nearly split my stitches! What's like without a sense of the ridiculous?
ReplyDeleteMeant to say "What's liFe"!
ReplyDeleteYour time in the hospital sounds quite an experience! At least you could laugh about it, I would have been traumatised.
ReplyDeleteHello, Lizy! I can't believe you had to go through all of that! Good thing you can laugh about it now. :)
ReplyDeleteHope you're having a lovely weekend and happy A to Z!!
I would choose the monkeys over the medical adventures any day!
ReplyDeleteMedicine in another country is sure an experience! Sounds like you had enough experience to last you for years!
ReplyDeleteyou've definately put me off moving abroad, Liz.
ReplyDeleteYour medical experience reminded me when I was staying in Spain at my sons before moving there.
ReplyDeleteI suffer from epilepsy and I was taken ill.......not from the epilepsy but one of the drugs I took wasn't being processed by the liver. I was taken to a private hopsital had blood test and a liver scan....result a week on a drip and trying to understand if you left your lunch they brought it back for your evening meal.
My insurance paid for the treatment and I was taken off the offending medication.
Have a wonderful week-end.
Yvonne.
Liz, I'm so glad we live in France! The medical service is excellent. when Steve went into hospital overnight for a small op to remove a cancer plus skin graft on his ear, he had a private room with shower, and the possibility to buy champagne as part of the menu (printed on a list of options on the bedroom door). Well, it is France...
ReplyDeleteHope you have recovered well from teh surgery and the experience!